Detection of polymorphisms of human DNA by gel electrophoresis as single-strand conformation polymorphisms.

Masato Orita(National Cancer Centre Japan), Hiroyuki Iwahana(National Cancer Centre Japan), Hiroshi Kanazawa(National Cancer Centre Japan), Kyohei Hayashi(National Cancer Centre Japan), T Sekiya(National Cancer Centre Japan)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 1, 1989
Cited by 3,643Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

We developed mobility shift analysis of single-stranded DNAs on neutral polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to detect DNA polymorphisms. This method follows digestion of genomic DNA with restriction endonucleases, denaturation in alkaline solution, and electrophoresis on a neutral polyacrylamide gel. After transfer to a nylon membrane, the mobility shift due to a nucleotide substitution of a single-stranded DNA fragment could be detected by hybridization with a nick-translated DNA fragment or more clearly with RNA copies synthesized on each strand of the DNA fragment as probes. As the mobility shift caused by nucleotide substitutions might be due to a conformational change of single-stranded DNAs, we designate the features of single-stranded DNAs as single-strand conformation polymorphisms (SSCPs). Like restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs), SSCPs were found to be allelic variants of true Mendelian traits, and therefore they should be useful genetic markers. Moreover, SSCP analysis has the advantage over RFLP analysis that it can detect DNA polymorphisms and point mutations at a variety of positions in DNA fragments. Since DNA polymorphisms have been estimated to occur every few hundred nucleotides in the human genome, SSCPs may provide many genetic markers.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis